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Lack of group X secreted phospholipase A₂ increases survival following pandemic H1N1 influenza infection

Authors :
Alyson A, Kelvin
Norbert, Degousee
David, Banner
Eva, Stefanski
Alberto J, Leόn
Denis, Angoulvant
Stéphane G, Paquette
Stephen S H, Huang
Ali, Danesh
Clinton S, Robbins
Hossein, Noyan
Mansoor, Husain
Gerard, Lambeau
Michael, Gelb
David J, Kelvin
Barry B, Rubin
Source :
Virology.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The role of Group X secreted phospholipase A2 (GX-sPLA2) during influenza infection has not been previously investigated. We examined the role of (Reviewer 2 Minor Comment 2) GX-sPLA2 during H1N1 pandemic influenza infection in a GX-sPLA2 gene targeted mouse (GX−/−) model and found that survival after infection was significantly greater in GX−/− mice than in GX+/+ mice. Downstream products of GX-sPLA2 activity, PGD2, PGE2, LTB4, cysteinyl leukotrienes and Lipoxin A4 were significantly lower in GX−/− mice BAL fluid. Lung microarray analysis identified an earlier and more robust induction of T and B cell associated genes in GX−/− mice. Based on the central role of sPLA2 enzymes as key initiators of inflammatory processes, we propose that activation of GX-sPLA2 during H1N1pdm infection is an early step of pulmonary inflammation and its (Reviewer 2 Minor Comment 2) inhibition increases adaptive immunity and improves survival. Our findings suggest that GX-sPLA2 may be a potential therapeutic target during influenza.

Details

ISSN :
10960341
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........11cc80b44397b89027d686c11d24dd61